In 1915, about the same time when British civil engineer
Wilfred Stokes turned to developing
trench mortars for the troops, the French
applied artist, silversmith and ironsmith Edgar Brandt did the same while serving in the French Army. He developed two
pneumatic weapons,
obusier pneumatique Brandt de 60 mm modèle 1915 on a
tripod carriage and later also
modèle 1916 on a cast aluminium baseplate. The first type of the shell (
projectile type A) had an aerodynamic teardrop body with flat
stabilizers (called vanes or fins) and an
obturation groove around its widest part, both features that would define the design of mortar shells in decades to come. In September 1917, the under-secretary of state for inventions sent a circular letter requesting inventors to design a better projectile for the successful Stokes mortar, and Brandt scaled his 60 mm projectile up to 81 mm. Both the British and French militaries adopted the scaled-up design except for the grooves (apparently, their importance wasn't realized at the time) in 1918 as
projectile BM (Brandt-Maurice) modèle 1918 (later simplified to
FA (fonte aciérée) modèle 1921) and Mk. II HE bomb respectively. After several years of further development, Brandt applied for a patent in January 1925 on a mortar shell with several obturation grooves (of several types), a design which has not in principle changed in the century since. The French shell
FA modèle 1924/27 was soon adopted in place of the
BM Mle 1918, closely followed the drawing in the patent; the
FA modèle 1932 offered even more improvement in range. It was this refined projectile design that made the Stokes-Brandt mortar so superior compared to the WWI Stokes: with Brandt-type WWII shells, the latter was able to reach in range. ==Description==